The New York Times' Dave Itzkoff has published an extensive look at the relative horror it is to audition for NBC's Saturday Night Live and its creator, notably weird, opinionated and enigmatic dude Lorne Michaels. If you like SNL, it's something to sink your teeth into; if you don't, it's another indication that being a woman on the show definitely used to suck a bit.

Rachel Dratch first auditioned for SNL in the late '90s, joining the cast in 1999. Of the experience, she told the Times:

I didn’t get it that year [of her first audition]. They hired Horatio [Sanz], Jimmy [Fallon] and Chris Parnell, and they said: "We're not taking any women this year. But maybe next year." I was at peace with it.

In an interview with The A.V. Clubfrom last year, Dratch said that when she first started doing comedy in Chicago, she felt like being a woman was a good thing:

One thing I noticed when I first moved to Chicago was that the teams were like you said, seven guys and one woman. Actually, it was kind of an advantage, because women were always in demand to improvise, and so if you were kind of good, you could get a lot of stage time, as opposed to if you were, like, the 80th white dude there. So I think it kind of ended up giving me more stage experience, and then you get better and better. It’s sort of the anti-vicious cycle. I don’t know what you call that: the miraculous cycle.